Automatic composing machine



Sept 11, 1956 G. P. BAFouR rs1-AL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE I 11 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed March 2l,V 1955 iff/CQ,o l

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Georges P. Bafour; ,4nd FranO/S Sept. l1, 1956 G. P. BAFOUR ET AL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE Filed Maren 21, 1955 11 sheets-sheet 2 INVENToRs: Georges P. Bafour: Andre R. Blanchard,

Frano/s H. Raymond .94*.`/ v A rro/Ns Y Sept. 1l, 1956 G, P. BAFOUR ET AL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC coMPosING MACHINE Filed Maron 21, 1955 11 Sheets-Sheet 4 ATTORNEY Sept. 11, 1956 G, P. BAFOUR ET AL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE y Filed Maron 21,' 1955 1l Sheets-Sheet 5 P/QQ NV NTORS Georges R @Amm/andr RELA/vcg/ARD Sept. l1, 1956 G. P. BAFOUR ETAL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE Filed March 21, 1955 11 Sheets-Sheet 6 F/Q /Q ,39 /38 Jee-ss-cvn/Tj] H5.

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ATTORNEY sept. 11, 1956 Filed March 21, 1955 G. P. BAFOUR ET AL AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE ll Sheets-Sheet '7 F/QO/Gb Georges R Barfour, Andre' R. Blanchard,

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A Pro/Ney Sept. 11, 1956 G. P. BAFOUR ETAL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC CoMPosING MACHINE Filed Maron 2l, 1955 1l Shets-Sheet 8 /I/ @o /Qc INVENTORS: 'Geo/Bes PBafQu/:Andre Rlanchard Frano/s H. Raymond BY m Madd,

Sept. 11, 1956 G. P. BAFOUR ETAL 2,762,485

AUTOMATIC coMPosING MACHINE Filed March 2l, 1955 l1 Sheets-Sheet 9 F/Q. /Od

G e P FOUR A #www @Of S n re 9 Frano/s H. RAYMOND BY yada/m,

A TTORNEY Sept. 11, 1956 G, P BAFOUR ET AL 2,752,485

AUTOMATIC COMPOSING MACHINE l1 Sheets-Sheet 10 Filed March 2l, 1955 www wirlkkkkkkk INVENTORS: ndre R.B/anchard or es RBafou/:A Ge '9 Franols H. Ra m Arroqusv United States Patent() AUTOMATIC COMPOSIN G MACHINE Georges P. Bafour and Andre R. Blanchard, Paris, and Francois H. Raymond, "Saint-Germain-en-Laye, France Application March 21, 1955, Serial No. 495,830 Claims priority, application France March 24, 1954 41 Claims. (Cl. 197-20) Our present invention relates to an automatic composing plant for printed texts.

The printing of texts involves a number of preparatory steps requiring to a large extent the services of a human operator. These steps usually include the transcription of an authors manuscript in typewritten form, for the purpose of producing a working copy for the compositor on which the latter, in addition to correcting typographie and grammatical errors, will enter a number of annotations for the printer such as the following:

(a) Indication of format and margins;

(b) Determination of justification;

(c) Determination of fonts or type faces for various passages of the text;

(d) Modification, if any, of paragraphs appearing on the typewritten copy;

(e) Indication of spaces to be left for cuts,A tables and the like to appear in the body of the text;

(f) Arrangement of footnotes.

The so annotated copy is then handed to -a printer who proceeds to set the type (automatically or by hand) or in some other manner, e. g. by a photographic process, prepares a matrix from which the text can be reproduced the desired number of times. The important steps in this operation may include the breakup of the lines and the justification of the margin in addition to the operations indicated by the compositors annotations, at least some of these steps having hitherto required the intervention of the human mind.

One of the objects of the present invention is to provide means for automatically carrying out the two steps just referred to.

A more general object of this invention is to provide means for automatically performing a number of composing operations hitherto carried out manually and mentally.`

A related object of our invention is to reduce the cost of reproduction of printed texts and to elimina-te sources of human error by providing a substantially fully automatic composing plant.

Another object of the instant invention is to provide means for automatically preparing a matrix for reproduction purposes from a record adapted'to be produced in simple manner from any legible manuscript.

It should be understood that the matrix herein referred to need not be in type but may take the form of an intermediate record (e. g. a perforated tape or a photographic film) adapted to control a type-setting machine in some manner known per se. l

For the sake of convenience, any recorded item adapted to be read or scanned by automatic means (e. g. mechanically, electrically or optically) will be referred to as a coded entry; any recorded item adapted to be read directly, including arbitrary or special (e. g. stenographic) symbols, will be termed a clear entry. Indications not 2,762,485 Patented Sept. 11,. 1956 ICC 2 mentioned compositors annotations, will be referredv to` as service informations.

An automatic composing plant according to the invention is primarily useful in a system in which the follow'- ing operational steps, partly manual and partly automatic, are to be carried out:

(A) Registration of coded entries of text and service informations correlated with one another; this stage of operations may comprise one or more recording phases and may result in a single record `containing both kinds of entry or in a separate reco-rd for each kind;

(B) Progressive conversion of these coded entries into electrical signals, again (according to the number of records) in a single operational phase or in two overlapping or alternating phases;

(C) Translation of the above signal-s into fa pattern of variables (e. g. electrical potentials) deining the complete typographie makeup of a text to be produced by a manually or automatically operated type-setting machine;

(D) Retranslation of the aforementioned4 variables into coded entries for the control of an automatic or semiautomatic type-setting machine or into clear entries fo the control of a machine operated by hand.

It will be understood tha-t stage (A), above, may involve the recording of additional coded entries representing a proofreaders corrections as well as the necessary service informations relating thereto; these additional entries will then be converted in stage (B) into sets of electrical signals serving to cancel and to modify certain of the variables produced in ystage (C). It will further be possible to produce a record of clear entries, for monitoring purposes, simultaneously with the preparation of the coded entries in stage (A) and also, if desired, to obtain parallel clear and coded records at the output of stage (D).

Thus, a system according to our invention comprises means for carrying out the registration, conversion, translation and retranslation set forth under (A), (B), (C) and (D) above, at least the means for eiecting the three last-mentioned operations being substantially fully auto- 1 matic.

germane to the text to be printed, such as the aforc- Generally, the registration of coded entries in stage (A) will involve a human factor, especially with regard to service information and corrections of text. -A feature of our invention resides in the adaptation of conventional keyboard machines (e. g. typewriters or teleprinters) for the recording of such entries in a most convenient and expeditious manner. A machine so modiiied comprises additional keys for the service entries, preferably together with means for (automatically or manually) consecutively numbering each line forV purposes of correlating the original record with a second record bearing the necessary corrections. Evidently, such a machine could produce the original text and service entries on a single record or on two separate records; the former is preferable since it dispenses with the need for special means to correlate the two kinds of entries. The operator may use such machine in the same manner as a conventional typewriter, except that any carriage return either within a line or to a preceding line must be avoided and no corrections must be made. in the principal text. The necessity for numbering each line may, however, be obviated in cases where, following the typing of each line together with the accompanying service informations, such line is immediately proofread and a cancellation signal is registered upon the discovery of any typing error, the line immediately succeeding them taking the place of the one so canceled.

Usually, then, and especially where a clearly legible manuscript is available on which the necessary annota- Ytions have already been entered by'hand, it will bemost 3 convenient to prepare (with the aid of the. aforementioned modified machine) a principal record of interleaved text and service entries in coded form, together with one or two monitoring tracks, such as sheets of paper, on which ine' entries appear in crear forni. The lines of the monitoringA track are consecutively numbered, these niiinbers `also appearing as service informations on the coded record. Should the original manuscript not have been neat enough for the compositor to work on, then arecord containing only the coded text entries could have been made upon retyping, to be followed by `a record of coded service entries (distributed over correspondingl'y numbered lines) after the compositor has completed'his work on the retyped text copy. A Nfurther coded record, preferably together with an uncoded monitoting`1 track, is prepared after proofreading; this record contains only the lines, identified by number, in which corrections of the principal record are required. Given a system of suiiiciently large storage capacity, the substitution of corrected lines for original Vones may be carried oiit by a device comparing the line-identifying numbers of two separately introduced records; more conveniently, though, the two records are inserted simultaneously, means being provided for advancing the correction record by one line whenever a corresponding line of the principal record hasV been reached.

The coded records so produced are then fed into the composing`-machine proper which may comprise an electric or electronic computer, e. g. one adapted in known imanner to convert a set of data on an input tape into a result appearing in coded or in clear form on an output tape. The tasks of the computer include the evaluation of the incoming service informations for purposes of line breakup and justification, the suppression of certain of theseservice informations which are useful only for the determination of the justification, and the transmittal of the text and the remaining service informations to a manual or automatic type-setting device in a form in which the desired justification is assured by the presence ofthe necessarypspacing between words and by the positive indication ofthe end of a line.

K Known' computers of the so-called universal or gen-V eralipurpose stored program type may be adapted to the above-enumerated purposes with little more than a change in the memory units of their control circuits. Such computershave been described,for example,y in Proceedings of thepl. R. E., October 1953, page i227.

important', though not essentiahl additional feature of our invention resides inthe provision of means, for making a singlereco'rd of coded text and service entries for use in a computer as set forth above, each entry comprising at least one code element (e. g'. perforation) characteristic for a particular class of entries; this vpart of the entry will subsequently be referred 'to as its Hag portion. Following it is a set of code elements. (one or more) in groupings which may be the same for entries in diier'ent classes and which more particularly define the individual members of the class characterized by the ag portion; this subsequent part of the entry will be termed the signal portion. The various flag portions serve, in a manner more fully described hereinafter, to condition certain registers in the computer to accept or to reject the associated code portions. The fiag portion of an entry may be common to a plurality of immediately consecutive entries of the same class and need not be repeated until an entry in a dilerent class has intervened.

The invention will be explained in greater detail with reference to the accompanyingdrawing in which:

Fig. l illustrates part of a perforated tapeA bearing text and service informations coded in accordance with the invention;

Fig. 2 diagrammatically shows a keyboard-controlled recorder for producing the tape of Fig. 1;

Fig. 3 is a circuit diagram illustrating the operation of the recorder of Fig. 2;

Fig. 4 is a modiiication of the circuit arrangement of Fig.- 3;

Fig. 5 is a circuit diagram of a pick-up device adapted to read the coded informations on the tape of Fig. 1;

Fig. 6 is an overall block diagram of a system for translating the code combinations on the tape of Fig. l into a printed text;

Fig. 7 isla more detailed circuit diagram of one of the elements shown in Fig. 6; u

Fig. 8 is a detailed circuitl diagram of a single-stage register included in the diagram of Fig. 7;

Fig. 9 is a circuit diagram similar to Fig. 8 but showing a multistage kstepping register forming part of the computer stage of the translator of Fig. 6;

Figs. 10a, 10b, 10c and 10d, when arranged side-byside as indicated in Fig. 10e, represent a more detailed circuit diagram of the computer stage of the translator;

Fig. 11 is a sequence chart illustrating the operation of a timer forming part of the translator of Fig. 6; and

Fig. 12 shows a partial modification of the computer stage illustrated in Figs. 10a-10d.

In Fig. l there are shown different parts oi a tape l carrying a series of coded entries each consisting of at least two consecutive transverse files of code elements, including text entries and service entries in random 'succession. Tape 1 is equally representative of an original record and of a correction record.

While the code elements have been illustrated as perforations, it will be understood that equivalent markings (produced, for example, electrolytically or photographically, by inking, or burning, by magnetic recording, etc.) may likewise be used. Means :for registering and reading any such entries are well known.

Thecode illustrated by way of example is of the sevenelement binary type. Tape 1 is also provided with the usual perforations 2 engageable by the teeth of a feed roller 21 (Fig. 3), the illustrated position of these perforations along the center line of the tape being, of course, not critical. Although a friction feed could also be used, the positive entrainment of the tape by one or more toothed rollers is preferred on account of the more precise synchronization obtainable.

Theadvance of the tape being assumed to take place from right'to left as indicated by the arrow, the entries thereon are' scanned from left to right. The time for passing' from one tile to the next during reading of the tape represents one unit interval and has been designated 9.

T he following classes of entries have been illustrated in Fig. 1:

J indicatingjustication p N indicating numbering of line V indicating variety of type faces C indicating character (letter, numeral, punctuation mark)V S indicating space between words B indicating beginning of paragraph E indicating end of paragraph `The effective portion of tape i is shown divided into eight rows designated, in order, j, n, v, c, s, b, e. and d.

The smallletters identifying the iii-st seven of these rows will be recognized as corresponding to the seven capital letters indicating the classes of entries just referred to. A single code element in any transverse tile, if occupying one of these* seven-rows, constitutes the iiag portion of an entry and characterizes it as falling within the class identified by the respectivel row. Thus, the iirst file of entryl contains a single hole in row j, that of entry N contains a single hole in` row n, and so on. These same seven rows also .carry the binary code elements in the signal portionV of each entry; the eighth line", d, is reserved for a discriminating element serving to distinguish the entries of class N from all the others.

It will be appreciated that the number of rows on tape i may' be reduced by eliminating, for example-rowsy b and e in which case the beginning and the end of a paragraph could be indicated by a special entry preceded by the flag C, or else by using a common flag (b or e) for the beginning and the end of a paragraph and replacing the special space code S with a code included in class C. In that event the signal portion of each entry will be recorded in a tive-element code.

With the seven-element code illustrated, each file can represent any of 128 different numerical values; codes J and N, for example, each have two tiles in their respective signal portions and may thus assume any value from through 16,383. Codes S, B and E, however, have each only a single value indicated by one perforation (on row d) in the single le constituting their signal portion. Codes C and V, whose signal portions also contain but one tile, each have 128 possible different values.

It will be noted that a perforation is present on row d in each le of the signal portions of all the entries with the exception of code entries N, this being so for the purpose of enabling the computer to suppress the line numbering of the typed (or otherwise prepared) text supplied to it. The numbering of the lines may, of course, be re-started every 10,000 lines or so without inconvenience or confusion.

On the tape illustrated in Fig. 1 the first entry is a code I, indicating the particular numerical value selected for the justication of the following text. This value is conveniently expressed in terms of the number of unit spaces required to fill up a line of printed text of prescribed length. Usually, a code of this class will not be needed again until a new justification value is introduced, i. e. until the width of the printed text is to be changed.

The next code, N, indicates the beginning of a new line in the typewritten text; it is followed by a code V designating the variety of type faces to be used until the next such code occurs. Thereafter, a single character (e. g. a oneletter word) appears in the form of a code C, followed by a code S for a space. The illustrated presence of another code V following this code S indicates a change in type faces. Next, a single perforation on row c introduces a series of codes C representing part of the message to be printed; there follows another space code S, which signifies the end of a typewritten line since it is followed immediately by a new line number code N. (If the line in the typewritten text had terminated in a hyphen occurring because of the separation of a word, this hyphen would have been suppressed by the machine described hereinafter and would have been replaced by a space code S.) After the number code N there occur again a succession of character entries C, followed by an end-ofparagraph entry E. Again, a code N announces the start of a new line, coincidentally with the beginning of a new paragraph as indicated by code B immediately thereafter. The body of this new paragraph again consists of an alternation of characters C and spaces S, interspersed with line numberings N, only the beginning of the rst code series C having been illustrated.

It will be apparent from the foregoing description of tape 1 that the information recorded therein could also have been distributed over two separate tapes of similar appearance, one tape containing all the text entries, Such as C and S, the other containing all the service informations such as J and V. Identical number codes N would have had to appear on both tapes for proper correlation. indentation codes B and E could have been recorded on either tape. lt will also be apparent that the text and service entries on tape 1, instead of being interleaved for each line as shown, might be rearranged so that all text entries (C, S) of one line appear grouped together and, following a repetition of the number code identifying such line, the service entries appertaining thereto (e. g. l, V) are similarly grouped. With such arrangement it would not be possible, of course, to indicate a change in type faces in the middle of a line as described in corinection with Fig. 1.

Reference is now made to Fig. 2 for a schematic illustration of a typewriter 3 adapted to produce the tape 1 of Fig. 1 together with a clear record for monitoring purposes. This device may be considered as having been derived from a conventional (e. g. electric) typewriter by supplementing its normal keyboard 10 with a second keyboard 10 and providing leads 4', 4 extending from their respective keys toward a recorder 5 operating on the tape 1. lt may equally be regarded as a modified teleprinter with extra keyboard and Without the usual distributor-transmitter.

Keyboard 10 is similar to that of any ordinary typewriter, with the possible addition of supplemental keys for characters not normally needed in typewritten texts. Keyboard 10" is here shown to consist of 100 keys bearing the numbers 0() through 99, thus enabling the registration of any number from 0000 through 9999. There is also provided the usual space bar, designated 10D, a line Afeed key 10L and seven special keys 10J, 10N, 10V, 10C, 10S, 10B and 10E each corresponding to one of the seven codes previously discussed. A further special key 10H serves to type a hyphen when a word is divided at the end of the line, this key being distinct from the one of keyboard 10' (upper right) bearing the regular hyphen used in compound words and to be retained in the printed text.

Two sets of type bars 6', 6 are controlled by the keyboards 10 and 10, respectively. Each of these keys also controls in the usual manner the advance of carriage 7 and, in a manner to be described in connection with Fig. 3, the advance of record tape 1 as well as the perforation ot entries therein constituting the signal portions of the multi-element codes J, N, V and C. Space bar 10D, when depressed, advances the carriage represented by roller 7 as well as the tape 2 and causes the punching of a perforation in row d of the latter. Key 10H operates one of the type bars 6 to cause a hyphen to appear on the monitoring sheet 9 carried by roller 7; this key also actuates the line feed mechanism which rotates roller 7 by one line and returns the carriage to its extreme lefthand position. Key 10L operates only the line feed, without leaving a visible imprint on sheet 8. The effect of the last-mentioned key 10L upon tape 1 is the same as that of space bar 10, causing a mark to be impressed in row d. The remaining lspecial keys, 10J, 10N, 10V, etc., have no effect upon roller 7 or type bars 6 6" but merely serve to advance the tape by onestep and to impress therein the single perforation constituting the flag portion of the corresponding code, thus, respectively, on row j, n, v, etc.

On sheet 8 there has been shown typewritten, by way of illustration, part of a text together with the pertinent service informations. The corresponding entries made simultaneously on tape 1 may be the same as those illustrated in Fig. 1, except that the relative position of the first two entries (I and N) has been interchanged in Fig. 2 to make all line numbers appear in the same column.

To prepare the message appearing on sheet 8 in Fig. 2, the operator proceeds as follows: With the carriage and roller 7 in its extreme right-hand position, she depresses key 10N to produce the flag portion of the rst code N on tape 1, then successively operates keys "00 and "01 on right-hand keyboard 10 to type the number of the first line, 0001, in the central column of the sheet, corresponding perforations being simultaneously produced in two consecutive files of tape 1 to form the signal portion of the first entry. Next, she depresses key 10] to enter the flag portion of code I on tape 1, and successively operates keys "81 and "53 of keyboard 10" to register the justification value, assumed to be 0653, prescribed by the compositor. In similar manner, by the successive operation vof keys 10V and 73," she registers the identification of the type faces, on both the monitoring sheet 8 and the record tape 1. Y n,

, The operator thereupon turns to the left-hand keyboard 10', depressing key 10C preparatorily to the typing of the first character (A) of the text. lt may be assun-led that each ofthe two-digit keys on keyboard 10 advances the roller 7 by two spaces, hence the rst letter of the text will be indented by six spaces from the lefthand margin (disregarding the four Spaces due to the typing of the line number, which are the same for each line and therefore are part of the margin). A look at the right-hand half of the sheet will s-how such indentation to be due to the registration of service information and notto the beginning of a paragraph; if this should be undesirable, `the two` halves of sheet 8 could be'separated and mounted on independently `movable carriages. The right-hand (service) half of the sheet might then be made transparent so that it can be laid over the left-hand (text) half for a convenient check of the correlation of the entries thereon.

Since the first letter of the text is to be followed by a space, the operator must next depress the key 10S before actuating the space bar 10D, thereby recording the flag portion of the space code on row s of tape 1. It has been assumed that the next word (new) requires a change in type faces, e. g. to italics or boldface, hence another actuation of key 10V followed by the operation of the appropriate two-digit key (65) is indicated. These steps account for the recording of the second entry V (Fig. l) on tape 1 and also advance the roller 7 by two extra spaces to the left.

The operator now again actuates key 19C, types the word new, depresses key 10S and space bar 10D, and reverts to the original choice of type faces by re-operating key 10V and key 73. There follows a new actuation of key 10C, after which letters and spaces are typed in the manner described above. At the end of the line, since the division of a word is (assumedly) required, she operates key 10S followed by key 10H which types a hyphen and resets the carriage to the beginning of the t next line.

After the carriage return, the operator actuates keys 10N, 00 and 02 to register the new line number, then proceeds with the typing of the words as before. Since this line has been assumed to constitute the end of a paragraph, the operator after typing the iinal period actuates key 10E and, immediately lthereafter, key 10L. The carriage is now positioned for the beginning of a new line which is again started by a numbering operation, followed by the actuation of keys 10B and 10D to enter the beginning of paragraph code B on tape 1 and to indent the new line by a fixed number of spaces.

This third line is assumed to contain a compound word (brand#new) whose hyphen is to be preserved in the text to be printed; this hyp'hen, accordingly, is produced in the usual manner by one of the keys of keyboard 10 and not by key 10H. After writing the last word (tool) the operator depresses keys 10S and 10L for another carriage return and proceeds to work on the next line in the manner previously described.

The machine shown in Fig. 2 requires the successive Operation of two key members, e. g. 10S and 10D, for each of a variety of operations such as spacing, indentation, hyphenation and line feed. This is somewhat cumbersome and has been described principally to further Vthe understanding ofthe correlation betweenthe typewritten characters appearing on sheet 8 and the perforated entries on tape 1. It will be plain, however, that space bar 10D can be wired (e. g. with the aid of slow-operating relays in cascade, see Fig. 4) to cause two successive advances of tape 1 along with the punching'of the proper perforation (in rows s and d, respectively) upon each ysuch advance, and that the connections of keys 10H, 10L 10B and 10E can be similarly moditied, -whereby key 10S becomes redundant and tlieafor'ementioned Yoperations are simplified. In like manner each key of keyboard 10 could be wired to preface each character code C with its own flag portion (perforation on row c), whereupon key 10C could also be omitted.

Although the keyboard 10" xhas been shown provided with 100 keys, it will be understood that this number could be increased to 128 with a seven-element code as illustrated in Fig. l; this, however, would require some three-digit keys to be included, which may not be very practical. The actual number of keys in this keyboard could, of course, be halved by the provision of the usual shift key, e. g. as shown in connection with keyboard 10. l It may also be mentioned that the two sets of type bars 6', 6", could be consolidated into a single set, each of the keys in keyboard 10V when operated causing the roller 7 to rotate by half a line spacing (e. g. with the aid of a simple pawl-'and-ra-tchet mechanism electromagnetically controlled from this keyboard) so that the service informations will appear interleaved with the text.

Furthermore, the numbering of the successive lines on sheet 8 may be automatic under the control of a counting device (not shown) responsive to the actuation of key 10H or 10L and adapted to operate the proper keys of keyboard 10". ln such event the numbering key 10N would be used only in the preparation of the correction sheet and tape, at which time the automatic counter would have to be inactivated since the line numbers there do not run consecutively.

The key 10, Fig. 3, is representative of any of the keys 10', 10", 10J etc. (including space bar 10D) shown in Fig. 2. lts stem carries a pair of collars 11x, lly adapted to engage, respectively, a pair of pivoted contact levers 12x, 12y co-operating with contact springs 13x, 13). It

should be noted that contacts 12x, 13x make before and break after contacts 1231, 13y. Spring 13x is connected to a wire 4x, representative of one of the leads 4', 4" in Fig. 2, which is connected to potential (i) through the winding of a stepping magnet 14. The armature of magnet 14 carries a pawl 15 which, whenever the magnet releases its armature, advances a ratchet 16 coupled to the shaft of a sprocket 17 whose teeth engage the perforations 2 of table 1. Poised above this tape, and in line with corresponding recesses in a support 18 for the tape, lare eight solenoid-controlled perforators 9j, 9u, 9v, 9c, 9s, 9b, 9e, 9d, whose positions define the eight rows j, n, v etc.'of Fig. l. One or more of these solenoids are connected to the contact spring 13y of each key 1) by way of Ya wire 4y and respective rectifiers required for mutual insulation of the multipl'ed energizing circuits. The feed mechanism 14-17 and the .perforators 9j, 9:1 etc. all form part of the recorder 5 shown in Fig. 2.

When the key 10 is depressed, contacts 3.21:, 13x close and energize magnet 14 which attracts'its armature without, however, advancing 16 at this time. Immediately thereafter, contacts 1231, 13) are closed and complete the circuit for their associated solenoids (here those of perforators 9d, 9e, 9c and 9u) which cause the tape 1 to bc Y perforated in the corresponding positions. As the key 1l) is released, contacts 12y, 13y and 12x, 13x open in short succession, the actuated perforators are retracted land the magnet 14 is de-energized, thereby moving the tape 1 ahead by the distance between two illes.

In Fig. 4 a modied recorder circuit has been shown in which the wire 4x is connected to the winding of magnet 14 not directly but through contacts of two slow-operato ing relays, namely through a break contact of a relay i9 and, in parallel therewith, Vthrough a make contact of a relay 20. Relay 19, whose winding is connected between battery and wire fly, has a second armature whose back contact normally extends wire ly to one of the solenoids associated with tape 1 (here that of perforator 9c); when relay '19 is operated this armature by way of its front contact extends wire ly to the winding of relay 20 which, through a further armature and front contact of its own, extends wire-4)' t'o a single one or a combination of these solenoids (here those of the same and 9n as in Fig. 3). t

When the key associated with wires 4x and 4y in Fig. 4 is depressed, magnet 14 is energized over the right-hand armature and back contact of relay 19, and perforator 9c is actuated to punch a hole in the c position of the tape. Shortly thereafter, relay 19 operates and breaks the energizing circuit of perforator 9c and magnet 14, the latter having just enough inertia to release its armature after the perforator has had time to withdraw from the tape. Tape 1 is thus advanced one step. Relay 19, in operating, also completed the energizing circuit for relay 20 which attracts its armatures shortly after the stepping of the tape, thereby re-operating magnet 14 and completing the circuits for perforators 9d, 9e, 9c and 9n which pierce the tape and are withdrawn upon the release of the tape, following which the tape advances one more step as the magnet 14 is one more de-energized. It will thus be seen that with the arrangement of Fig. 4 a single key combines the functions of a flag key, such as C, and a character key, such as 10', or of a combination of a flag (e. g. 10S or 10B) and the space bar (10D), all as described in connection with Fig. 2.

In Fig. 5 we have shown a pick-up head, generally designated 2l, serving to translate the codes on tape 1 into electrical impulses capable of being evaluated by an electronic computer. It comprises a sprocket wheel 22, driven from a ratchet 23, which engages the perforations 2 of tape 1 for a step-by-step advance under the control of a pawl 24 coupled with the armature of a stepping magnet 25. rl"his magnet has a first or operating winding 26 and a second or blocking winding 27. The conductors feeding these two windings, leading to sources of operating (assumedly positive) and blocking (assumedly negative) potential, respectively, have been designated 28 and 29.

Eight photocells 30, positioned on either side of sprocket 22, are excitable by corresponding lamps 31 as perforations appear in their respective positions on the tape 1 separating the photocells from the lamps. The output electrode (anode) of each photocell 30 is applied over a lirst amplifier-inverter 32 to a respective one of eight leads collectively designated 33' and over a second amplitier-inverter 34, in cascade with the first, to a respective one of eight leads collectively designated 33". The cable carrying all sixteen of these leads has been indicated at 33.

Each of the leads 33 carries a direct signal assumed to be a positive potential when the corresponding photocell is excited, otherwise a negative one. Conversely, each of the leads 33 carries an inverted signal assumed to be a negative potential when its photocell is excited, otherwise a positive potential. The direct signals have been indicated by the letters j, n, v, c, s, b, e and d corresponding to the similarly designated code elements of Fig. l; the inverted 'signals have been indicated by the letters j (pronounced j bar), n, v, c, s, b, e and d.

In practice, each of the leads 33 is suitably multiplied to make the corresponding signal j, n, v etc. or j, n, v etc. available at a plurality of points as will subsequently appear. lt will be understood that these multiple connections will be isolated from one another, e. g. by means of rectiliers (diodes) in the manner illustrated in Figs. 3 and 4 or with the aid of amplifier (e. g. cathode follower) stages.

Fig. 6 gives an overall schematic view of a translator designed to convert the information on a perforated tape (or equivalent recording medium) into a printed text. The principal elements of the translator shown in Fig. 6 are an entrance stage 35, a computer stage 36 and a utilization stage 37.

Two perforated tapes 1A and 1Z, each similar to tape 1 of the preceding figures, are fed into respective pick-up heads 21A, 21Z each of the type of head 21 shown in Fig. 5. Tape 1A represents the principal record produced perforators 9d, 9e, 9c

l0 by the recorder 5 (Fig. 2),upon the original typing of the text on sheet 8; tape 1Z represents the correction record produced upon the retyping of all error-containing lines of this text as previously described. Conductor 28 of Fig. 5, leading to the actuating winding 26 of stepping magnet 25, is duplicated in Fig. 6 at 28A and 28Z for each of the heads 21A and 21Z, respectively; conductor 29, leading to the blocking winding 27 of magnet 25, is similarly duplicated at 29A and 29Z. Stepping impulses are periodically applied to conductors 28A and 28Z, at intervals 0 (cf. Fig. l), by a timer 38. Each of conductors 29A. and 29Z is multiplied to a lead 39 from timer 38 and to a respective lead 41 or 42 from a selector 40. The output multiples 33A and 33Z of pick-up heads 21A and 21Z, corresponding to multiple 33 of Fig. 5, are connected by way of respective gate circuits 45 and 46 to a junction circuit 47 whence they continue as a single cable 33 to output circuit 48. A branch 33A and 33Z of each of these multiples also extends to selector 40 from which two leads 43, 44 pass toward the gates 45 and 46, respectively. Output circuit 48 may contain one or more amplifier stages for the signals transmitted over multiple 33.

The signals from entrance stage 35 are delivered to the input circuit 49 of computer stage 36. Circuit 49 works into a first distributor 50, connected to a memory unit 51, and into a second distributor 52, connected to a computer 53. Data from computer 53 are stored in two additional memory units 54 and 55. An evaluator 56 is controlled from the three memory units 51, 54, 55 and, by way of a lead 57, from timer 38 which is also linked to computer 53 by two signal paths, one for each direction of trailic, schematically represented at 58, 59. Evaluator 56 works into an output circuit 60 which again may contain a number of amplifying stages as required. It will be understood that memories 51, 54, 55 need not be separate units but may form part of a single unit representing the general memory of a so-called universal computer.

The final or utilization stage 37 has its input circuit 61 connected to the output circuit 60 of stage 36. Signals from circuit 61 are applied to a converter 62 controlled from timer 38 over a lead 63. Converter 62, in turn, controls the printer 64 which produces a printed page 65 from the data supplied to it by the converter; the line-byline advance of page 65 is controlled by a circuit 66 responsive to signals delivered via a lead 67 from timer 38.

In operation, as will be described in greater detail with reference to subsequent figures, the entrance stage 35 combines the entries on tapes 1A and 1Z so that the signals applied by output circuit 48 to input circuit 49 represent the text and service informations relating to the fully corrected message to be printed. These signals are temporarily stored in memory unit 51, distributor 50 serving to suppress the numerical codes N which have served their function in controlling the selector 40 of stage 35. At the same time, these signals are also applied by distributor 52 to computer 53 which determines the length (in units of space) of a series of entries delivered to stage 36, as well as the number of blanks in such series, and applies these data to memory units 54 and 55, respectively. Evaluator 56, on the basis of information supplied to it from memory units 51, 54 and 55, determines the length of a train of text elements (characters and spaces) to be printed in a single line appearing on page 65, this train of text elements together with the accompanying service informations being fed via circuits 60, 61 to converter 62 which translates them into conventional printing signals (e. g. Baudet-type code pulses) adapted to control the printer 64.

The function of selector 40 is to block alternately the pick-up heads 21A and 21Z so that only one of these devices will respond at any time to the stepping impulses applied to them simultaneously over leads 28A, 28Z. Gate 45 is unblocked by the selector, via lead 43, whenever pick-up head 21A1is operative, except during the scanning of a line of original text which has been superseded by a corrective line on tape 12. Gate 46 is unblocked bythe selector 40, via lead 44, Whenever pick-up head 212 is operative. Timer 38 is controlled from computer 53, over signal path 59, to apply blocking voltages to leads 29A and 292 whenever a suiciently long series of entries has been delivered to input circuit 49, whereby both pick-up heads are simultaneously inactivated until after the evaluator 56 has completed its work.

A suitable circuit for the selector is shown in Fig. 7. The leads 33A and 332 coming from pick-up heads 21A and 212 (Fig. 6) extend to respective distributors 68A, 682 controlling registers 69A and 692, respectively; these registers may be of the static or singlestage type. Distributors 68A and 682 apply to the registers only the code combination identified by their flag portions (single perforation in row n, Fig. l) as numerical codes N. A decoder 70A, controlled by register 69A, translates all the codes N appearing on tape 1A into potentials (e. g. of positive polarity) increasing progressively with the numerical values value of these codes; a decoder 702, controlled by register 692, similarly translates all the codes N appearing on tape 12 into progressively increasing potentials of like polarity. The potentials produced by both decoders 70A, 702 are applied to respective inputs of a comparator 71.

Comparator 71 is arranged to supply unblocking potentials (positive) or blocking potentials (negative) to the four output conductors 41, 42, 43, 44 of selector 40. The comparator is of a type delivering a relatively positive output voltage Whenever the potentials applied to its inputs by circuits 70A and 702 are different, regard less of their relative polarity; it delivers a relatively negative output voltage when the two potentials are alike. This output voltage is applied directly to conductor 41 and by way of an inverter 72 to conductors 42 and 44; the voltage on conductor 41 is communicated to conductor 43 via a junction circuit 73. The comparator 71 also applies its inverted output voltage, e. g. via conductor 42, to a gate circuit 74 which is traversed by the output of decoder 70A, this output passing through a condenser 76 on its way to one input of a second comparator 75. The same output is also applied to another input of comparator 75 across a condenser 77. Leakage resistors 78 and 79 connect the two inputs of comparator 75 to ground. Comparator 75, which may comprise for example, a bistable multivibrator, produces ya relatively positive output potential only when a positive pulse is applied to it by Way of condenser 76; it thereafter remains in this condition until a positive pulse isl applied to itby way of condenser 77, Vits output potential thereupon again assuming a normal, relatively negative value. The output potential of comparator 75 controls agate circuit 80 blocking or permitting the application of a highly negative voltage from a battery 81 to conductor 43 via junction 73; it will be noted that junction 73 includes a rectifier so poled as to prevent this negative voltage from reaching conductor 41. The combination of condenser 76 and resistor 7S is shunted by a rectitier'SZ.

For an understanding of the operation of selector 40 it should be remembered that the line numbers represented by code entries N on tape 1A run consecutively, e. g. from 0001 through 9999, whereas only some of these entries appear also on tape 12. On the assumption of a relatively low incidence of faultyvlines inthe original typewritten text, therefore, the numerical value of entries N on tape 12 will usually increase by large steps, as by jumping from, say, 0004 (first faulty line) yto 0005, 0011, 0027, 0053 and so on. Let us suppose, then, that the tapes 1A and 12 have just been fed into their-respective pick-up heads .21A and 212, that the photocells 30 (Fig. 5) of head 21A are scanning the tirst numerical code 0001 appearing on tape 1a and .are causing this code to be stored enregister 69A, and that head 212 is sin'iultaneously scanning the first numerical Ycode 0004 appearing'on tape 1-2 andlis vcausing its storage lon register 692. Decoder A, therefore, applies to comparator71 a positive potential which is lower than that applied to the comparator at the same time by decoder 702.

The comparator 71, responding to the inequality of its input potentials, applies positive voltage to conductor 41 and negative voltage to conductors 42 and 44 as well as to gate 74, thus blocking the latter. Comparator has been preset, e. g. by a manual control device not shown, to its normal condition in which its output is negative and blocks gate 80. Thus, the positive voltage on conductor 41 also finds its way to conductor 43 across junction 73. Pick-'up device 21A and gate 45 are, therefore, operative to establish a channel for the transmittal of the contents of tape 1A to output circuit 48, pick-up device 21B and gate 46 being blockedA The stepping magnet 25 of head 21A, responding to impulses transmitted over lead 28A, advances the tape 1A until the next line numeral, 0002, is read. At this point the potential in the output of decoder 70A is increased by one step but still falls short of the potential in the output of decoder 702, hence the condition of comparator 71 remains unchanged. At the same time the change in the output of decoder 70A inetfectually applies a positive pulse to comparator 7S across condenser 77. The same situation exists when head 21A subsequently reaches the numerical code N corresponding to line 0003 of the original text.

When, however, numerical code 0004 is read by device 21A, the potentials of the two inputs of comparator 71 become equal and the voltages on all four output conductors 41, 42, 43, 44 are reversed. Thus, the stepping magnet of head 21A is arrested, gate 45 is blocked, head 212 is stepped and gate 4-6 becomes conductive, thereby establishing a channel for the transmittal of the contents of tape 12 to output circuit 48. At the same time, gate 74 becomes conductive and applies the potential Vof decoder '70A to comparator 75, in the form of a brief positive pulse, by 'way of condenser '76; comparator 75 is thus tipped into its alternative condition of conductivity, applying a positive voltage to gate 30 and electively connecting battery 81 to conductor 43, thereby driving the potential thereon still more negative.

After the corrected line on tape 12 has been read and communicated to computer stage 36, a new numerical code is scanned by head 212, assumed to identify the next line 0005.V Since now the potentials controlling comparator 71 are again unequal, the comparator again reverses its condition to activate channel 33A while blocking channel 332. (2v/ing to the provision of rectifier shunt 82, condenser 76 does not transmit a negative pulse to the lower input of bistable comparator 75, hence the latters condition remains unchanged and the negative terminal voltage of battery 81 overrides the positive voltage applied to conductor 43 from conductor 41. Gate 45 remains, therefore, blocked during the reading of line 0004 on tape 1A which line, it will he remenn bered, had Vbeen replaced by the correspondingly numbered line .on correction tape 12.

After the pick-up head 21A has progressed to the next line number 0005 on tape 1A, the output voltage of clecoder 70A is again increased and a positive pulse is transmitted to the upper input of comparator 75; since now, however, theline numbers stored on registers 69A and 692 are once more alike, equal voltages are applied 7 to comparator 71 and the latter uublocks the gate 74 so that a positive pulse is simultaneously also transmitted through condenser 76, leaving unchanged the condition of comparator V75. Comparator 71 now causestape 12 to advance to the point where the next numerical code N, assumed to have the value of 0011, appears on register Now again, as after the reading of line 0004 on tape 12, the condition of comparator 71 is reversed and tape 1A is advanced past pick-up head 21A, gate 45 remaining blocked las before to prevent the feeding of superseded original text line 0005 into junction 47. When the next line code is reached, the increase in the output voltage of decoder 70A applies a positive pulse to comparator 75 across condenser 77 and, by causing the latter to block gate 80, lifts the negative potential from conductor 43. Comparator 71 remains normal and code elements from tape 1A are transmitted to computer stage 36 until a code matchingthe one stored on register 692, assumedly of numerical value 0011, is received by register 69A.

In the preceding description it has been assumed that each numerical value of code N produces a different potential in the output of decoder 70A (or 70Z). It will be readily understood that, in practice, the number of different potentials required may be considerably reduced by substituting potential combinations for single potentials, e. g. by using a combination of four potentials each capable of assuming ten distinct magnitudes to express 10,000 numerical values.

In Fig. 8 we have shown in detail a register69 representative of either of registers 69A, 69Z of Fig. 8. This register comprises fourteen flip-flop circuits designated 83j, S3n, 83V, 83C, 83s, 83b, 83e and 83j', 83m', 83v, 83o', 83s', 8311', 83e', each of these circuits being preferably constituted by a bistable multivibrator as indicated. Each multivibrator has an output lead 84 extending toward decoder 70 and arranged to carry either a relatively positive or a relatively negative voltage, dependent upon the condition of the respective multivibrator whose normal or zero condition may be assumed to give rise to a negative output. A zeroizing lead 85 is multipled to the right-hand inputs of all the multivibrators and .serves for their simultaneous resetting to normal by applying a positive impulse to these inputs. The other, left-hand input of each multivibrator is connected to a respective one of fourteen terminals 86 (first seven multivibrators 83j through 83e) or 86 (last seven multivibrators 83]" through83e') by way of a pair of rectiiiers 87, 88 con nected` in series back-to-back. The junction of these rectifers is connected through a resistor 89 to positive potential and through a further rectifier 90 to a bus bar 91 (multivibrators 83j through 83e) or 91 (multivibrators 83j' through 83e).

Lead 85 is connected to the cathode of a cathode follower tube 92 having its grid connected, via a rectier 93, to a conductor 94 Connected in turn, through a resistor 95, to positive potential. A group of eight terminals 96 are connected to conductor 94 through respective rectiiiers 97; these terminals are joined to certain leads of multiple 33A' (Fig. 7) so as to have the respective signals and d applied to them as indicated. In similar manner, each of the seven terminals 86 as well as each of the seven terminals 86 has a respective signal j, n, v, c, s, b and e applied to it.

Conductor 94 is further connected to a conductor 98 by way of a delay network 99 introducing a time delay 0; conductor 98, in turn, is connected via a similar delay network 99 to a conductor 98'. Conductor 9S is connected through a rectifier 100 to the grid of a cathode follower tube 101 whose cathode is tied to bus bar 91; in analogous manner the conductor 98 is connected through a rectiiier 100' to the grid of a cathode follower tube 101' having its cathode tied to bus bar 91'.

The selection of signals applied to terminals 96 insures that the register 69 is responsive only to the numerical codes N, i. e. to codes whose flag portions consist of a single perforation in position n so as to result in the simultaneous application of positive potentials to all eight'of these terminals. It will be understood that any other combination (including a noesignal condition in the absence of any perforations on tape 1) will result in the presence of negative potential on at least one of terminals 96, thereby causing a current to iiow through resistor 95 which maintains the potential of the grid of tube 92 and, thereby, of conductor 85 at a relatively Vnegative value. When the special signal combination corresponding to the flag portion of code N occurs, the cathode of tube 92 is driven positive and a zeroizing impulse is applied to all multivibrators 83j through 83e'. A positive enabling impulse is simultaneously transmitted through delay networks 99 and 99', reaching the grid of tube 101 after a time interval 0 and the grid of tube 101 after a time interval 20.

When the multivibrators are in their normal or zero condition, they remain unalfected by positive impulses applied to any terminal 86 or 86 as long as the associ ated cathode follower tube 101 or 101' is non-conductive or in a relatively low state of conductivity, as Will be the case in the absence of the enabling impulse mentioned above. When, however, such an impulse is applied to tube 101, the signal voltages present at that time on terminals 86 as a result of the scanning of the combination of perforations in the tirst tile of the signal portion of code N result in the reversal of certain of the first group of multivibrators 83j-83e; similarly, when the enabling impulse subsequently reaches tube 101', the signa'l voltages present on terminals 86 will be due to the scanning of the second tile of the signal portion of that code and will reverse certain of the second group of multivibrators 83j-83e. Thus, after the perforations constituting the three tiles of a numerical code N have moved past the photocells 30 of pick-up head 21, the fourteen mu1tivibrators of the associated register 69 apply a combination yof potentials to decoder 70 which latter, in a manner known per se (e. g. by means of conventional diode of resistance matrices), derives from these potentials a characteristic output voltage or, preferably, a combination of such output voltages appearing on a suitable number of output leads, e. g. the four leads shown at 102 in Fig. 8.

It will be understood that the register 69 of Fig. 8 may be readily modified for the selective storage of any other of the codes discussed in connection with Fig. 1. Thus, the code J will be registrable if terminals 96 are connected to conductors carrying the signal combination j----s--'e-- it being necessary, however, to provide one more multivibrator in each of the groups associated with bus bars 91 and 91' for the purpose of registering the code elements appearing in row d (which is unperforated in the code N). For a code such as V, on the other hand, only eight multivibrators will be required and the circuit 91', 98', 99', 100', 101' may be omitted.

In Fig. 9 there has been illustrated a multi-stage register 103 generally similar to the one shown in Fig. 8 but adapted for the storage of a plurality of successive code combinations in its several stages. Register 103 comprises a tirst stage of eight multivibrators 104]', ,104n, 104V, 104e, 104s, 10417, 104e, 104d, a second stage of eight multivibrators 104j, 104n, 104v', 104C', 104s', 104b, 104e', 104d', and any number of additional such stages not shown. Input terminals 105 are arranged to receive direct" signals j, n, v, c, s, b, e and d, respectively. Each of these terminals is connected to the left-hand input of a respective multivibrator of the iirst stage via a de'lay coil 106 and a condenser 107; each terminal 105 is further connected over a resistor 108 to negative potential and over an individual rectier 109 to bus bar 110 which latter, in turn, is connected to negative potential by way of a resistor 111. Bus bar 110 extends to a grid of a cathode follower tube 112, another grid of this tube being connected to a terminal 113. The cathode of tube 112 is connected to a zeroizing conductor 1.14, multipled to the right-hand inputs of multivibrators 104]' through 104d, to a similar conductor 114', multipled to the right-hand inputs of multivibrators 104] through 104d, and to like conductors of subsequent stages (not shown). Each of the multivibrators of the iirst stage has an output lead connected via a delay coil 106' and a condenser 107 to the 1eft-hand input of a corresponding multivibrator of the second stage; in analogous manner, each multivibrator '15 of the latter stage has an output lead connected via a delay coil 106 and a condenser 107 to an output of a respective multivibrator of the next following stage (not shown).

When a positive potential is impressed upon one or more of terminals 105, the upper grid of tube 112 is driven positive and causes a resetting impulse of positive polarity to b'e applied to all the multivibrators of the register. lf any multivibrator of the iirst stage, e. yg. device ldj, was previously oit-normal, its resetting causes a positive impulse to pass through delay coil 105 and condenser 107 toward the corresponding multivibrator, i. e. device 104i', of the second stage which is thus driven olf-normal an instant after .the resetting step. In similar manner an activating impulse is transmitted from any previously `oii-normal multivibrator of the second stage to a Ycorresponding multivibrator of the next stage, and so on. At Vthe same time the .original positive signal app'lied to any ofthe Vterminals Y105 passes in the form of a .slightly delayed activating impulse'through coil 106 and condenser 107, whereby one or more of the multivibrators of the rststage are driven olf-normal in accordance witth the signal combination appearing at the input of the register. it 'will thus be seen that -each code combination fed `into register 103 successively traverses its several stages, a number of such combinations equal to the number of stages being thus simultaneously storable in the register.

Terminal 113 serves for the progressive emptying of' the register 103 by the application of a succession of positive stepping impulses to this terminal. With no signal voltages present on terminals 105, i. e. with all of these terminals held at a relatively :negative potential, the :application of the first stepping pulse to terminal 113 producesa zeroizing impulse on conductors 114 and 114', thereby resetting all multivibrators and causing any multivibrator of a succeeding stage to assume the erstwhile condition of its counterpart in the stage immediately preceding, in the manner previously described. Owing to the absence 4of an input signal combination, however, all the -multivibrators of the rst stage will now remain normal. The next stepping impulse similarly normalizes the seco-nd stage of the register, transferring the code combination thereof to the next stage (or to a utilization circuit outside of theregister, such as the decoder 70 of Fig. 8, if there are only two stages), and in this manner each code combination stored in the register is repeated from one stage to the next and is nally discharged` from the register. The circuit of Fig. 9 is representative of various elements of the computer stage 36 to be described in greater detail hereinafter.

Before considering the structural -arrangement of this computer stage, -it will be well to analyze the nature of the task of justification which this stage is called upon to perform. Fundamentally, justiiication requires the assembly of a series or train of text elements (characters and spaces) whose cumulative length L, expressed -as an integral number of unit lengths, -is equal `to or Iless than the predetermined llength I of a printed line `as selected by the compositor `and recorded in the form of the similarly designated justification code (Fig. l). I the length L is less than the length l, which in Vpractice will usually be the case, the difference J-L must be distributed over the available word spaces whose number will be designated by the letter W. Each word space, therefore, will have to be increased by the quotient of the division (-J- L)/ W, this being notV exactly possible where such quotient is of the form Q-I-R/ W (R being a remainder). Since, however, R(Q+l) (W-R)Q=,QW+R, the right 'hand member of this equation being by definition equal 'to .I-.L, -it will be seen that the desired justification may be attained by increasing each of the rst R spaces by a length equal to -,Q-ll and increasing the remaining W-R spaces by a length equal to Q. The computer about to be described with reference to Pigs. 10a-10d is adapted to carry out this operation.

kThe Vforegoing analysis is strictly cor-rect only if there are no restrictions to be observed in the vtermination of a printed line. The rules of grammar, however, impose limitations upon the manner in which a line may be brokenoff and, in particular, prevent the separtion of certain text elements. A partial list for the English language of elements which ought not to be separated, limited to four-element groups, is given in the following table; it should be borne in mind, however, that usage imposes additional prohibitions which cannot be generalized in this form and which an automatic system of the character herein disclosed could recognize as such only with the aid of a special (no-division) code combination embodied in the text, along with the other service informations, by the compositor.

In the table given below:

* symbolizes any text element (character or space) Y symbolizes any character (letter, numeral or punctuation mark) X symbolizes any consonant T symbolizes any consonant other than 1, m, n, r, s

U symbolizes any vowel O symbolizes a space 5 symbolizes any numeral symbolizes any punctuation mark Small letters represent themselves.

The last prohibition in the above list results from the desirability of suppressing a space at the ybeginning of a new line; it will not be necessary where suchinitial space is automatically eliminated by the apparatus. The list is, of course, only illustrative and may be supplemented or modified, e. g. so as allow the splitting of words only in a small number of well-denedinstances or not at all. Since the apparatus cannot distinguish between four-element combinations (e. g. r-e-a-d) where division isimproper (as between the vowels e-a in reading) and where it is permissible (as between the same vowels in readjust), it is preferablefto err on the conservative side, e. g. by completely barring the splitting of vowels land of such combinations as e-r (usually inseparable in American usage, except in a few words such as materialt). It will be appreciated, of course, that greater flexibility is obtainable by increasing the number of discriminating stages of the system (describediu connection with Figs. 10a-10d) to enable it to take more than four text elements into consideration.

Returning now to the mode of justification described above, it will be necessary for the apparatus :not only to measure a sequence of characters yand spaces having a lengthv L equal to or justrshort of the justification value I but also to determine whether or nota break is permissible at the end of this sequence. If such break is prohibited, the sequence must be progressively shortened until a divisible character combination is reached. The length thus obtained, representing a train of text elements terminating in an element whose `separation from the next character is allowable (e. g. a space, a vowel other than e followed by any consonant, or Vany vowel followed Vby a consant other than r), shall bedesignated Le. The determination of the quotient Q-i-R/ W. will then be carried out by substituting L1; for L in the mathematical op- Vision (J-Lt)/ W.

A further modification of this operation will be necessary at the end and at the beginning of each paragraph. When the end of paragraph code E appears on the record tape, the sequence Le of assembled characters and spaces, whose numerical Weight is determined by the selected variety of type faces (code V), is supplemented by a number of spaces to make the total length equal to the value L previously defined; thus Le-j-Se=L, Se being the cumulative length of the justifying end-of-paragraph spaces added. These justifying spaces may each have a xed value independent of the font selected; if this value is equal to one unit length, it Will evidently be possible always to add just enough spaces to make the value of L=Le+Se exactly equal to I, hence no further justifying operation will be required. In a more general manner, however, a justifying space may be given an arbitrary value of any integral number of unit lengths, in which case the length L will again be selected as the value nearest to but not exceeding J, the aforedescribed mathematical operation being then carried out as before by dividing the number of spaces W (considering only the Weighted sequence Le) into the dierence J-(Le-l-Se). Clearly no determination of line terminability is required in either case.

At the beginning of a paragraph, indicated by the appearance of a code B, a fixed number of spaces of cumulative length Sb are arranged to precede the sequence of text elements Whose length Lb must be selected so that Sb-l-L1 =Ln as previously defined, the exact value of Ln being again determined by the choice of a proper breakup point as in the case of any line other than the last line of a paragraph. Hence, justification again requires the number W of weighted spaces in sequence Lb to be divided into the difference J- (Lb-I-Sb), resulting in an integral quotient Q and a remainder R serving to lengthen the weighted spaces in the manner outlined above. v

Bconvenient way of determining the length Le of a terminable sequence of text elements consists in placing the last K characters and blanks (K being an integral number) of an established sequence of length L(L`]) in a reserve so as to leave only a foreshortened sequence of length L-Lk to be tested for terminability. If a break is found to be prohibited, the elements of the reserve are 1 progressively added to the main sequence until a divisible character combination is found, at which time the length of the reserve will have been reduced to k; thus, Lt=L-Lk. The values of Q and R are determined from the previously established relationship Since the difference D must be spread over the available spaces in the sequence retained, it will be necessary to enlarge each of these spaces to an extent proportional to D and inversely proportional to the number W of such spaces. If the number of spaces is small, their length may have to be objectionably increased if D is large. To obviate this drawback it is required that D be at all times not more than equal to a value M=2m where m is the maximum length allowed to be added to any space. Thus, by weighting each space in the sequence so as to increase its length by m, the computer first determines M Wm and then compares it with D by carrying out the subtraction M -D=M (J-L-l-Lk). If the difference M -D is negative, the value of D must be decreased by reducing Lk through the transfer of additional text elements from the reserve to the main sequence until a new permissible breakup point is reached. If the elements transferred include one or more spaces, this operation will incidentally increase the value of W and, hence, of M so that the desired limitation of space length will be more rapidly achieved.

Reference is now made to Figs. a-10d fora detailed description of the computer stage 35 of Fig. 6. The input 18 circuit '140, Fig. 10a, comprises sixteen terminals .115 upon which the previously dened signals d, d, e, e, b, b, s, s; c, c, y, v, n', n, j, j are impressed as indicated.- A set of conductors 116 extend from terminals 115 toward distributor 150 which introduces a delay equal to one unit interval 0 and incorporates a plurality of circuits, ach of the character shown in Fig. S, adapted to discriminate between the various code combinations. The distributor 150 has six outgoing channels designated 117], 117V, 117C, 117S, 117B, 117E leading to respective registers 118], 118V, 118C, 118S, 118B, 118B. Multiples 117C and 117S, carrying code signals representing characters and spaces which together constitute the text elements as dis'- tinct from service informations, also extend to a junction circuit 119; channel 1171 further extends to a subtractor 120 which also receives over a channel 121 the code previously stored in register 118]. It will thus be understood that the latter register may comprise a circuit similar to that of the first stage of register 103 (Fig. 9) but with enough multivibrators to accommodate the sixteen elements of the signal portion of code I. The subtractor 120, as well as other arithmetical computing devices shown in Figs. 10a-10d, are all of a construction well known per se; reference may be made, for example,

l to Figs. 13-21 and 13-24 of the book High-Speed Computing Devices, by Tompkins, Wakelin and Stitiier, Ir., Engineering Research Associates, Inc., published 1950 by McGraw-Hill Books, New York.

'I'he numerical value stored in register 118V controls two weighting circuits 122 and 123 which receive the output of registers 118C and 1185, respectively. Circuit 122 translates the character code combinations of register 118C' into potentials representing different numerical values of predetermined relative magnitudes; the absolute magnitudes of these potentials, hence of the values indicated thereby, are co-determined by the output of register 118V representing the selected variety of type faces. Circuit 123 similarly weights the space code combinations of register 1188 and applies them to an outgoing lead 124 extending to a junction circuit 125; it additionally weights the same space code combinations by adding aforementioned maximum increment m' to the basic value transmitted over lead 124 and applying the so augmented value to a lead 126. Junction circuit 125 also receives the output of circuit 122 over a lead 127.

It will be understood that channels 1171, 117V and 117C each represent a seven-wire multiple, since the tiles of the signal portions of the corresponding codes I, V and C may contain up to seven distinctive code elements (perforations) translated into a like number of characteristic (assumedly positive) potentials. Channels 11 7S, 117B and 117B, on the other hand, are single conductors since only a single potential, corresponding to the perforation on row d, need be transmitted. Channel 121, similarly, represents a fourteen-wire multiple whose several conductors extend from the sixteen storage devices (e. g. multivibrators) of the register 118] which may be substantially of the form illustrated in Fig. 9; thus, the two eight-element code combinations successively received by the register upon each transmittal of a justification code J cause the code previously stored therein to be discharged over multiple 121 into subtractor 120. It should be noted, however, that register 118] lacks the zeroizing input 113 of Fig. 9; this is also true of register 118V which otherwise may be considered identical with the rst stage of register 103. Both of these registers, therefore, retain their contents until a new code of the appropriate kind is received by distributor 150. Register 118C, while being otherwise similar to register 118V, is `provided with a zeroizing terminal T1 controlled from the timer 38 of Fig. 6; registers 1188, 118B and 118B, each of which may consist of a single multivibrator, also have respective zeroizing terminals T2, T3 and T4. The resetting and other control pulses applied by the timer to various terminals T-, or vice versa, have been illus- 

